De Kock To Seal It

Igugu

Our Princess. Mike De Kock’s Igugu looks to turn her fortunes around on Saturday at Meydan.

The most successful international trainer in the history of both the Dubai World Cup meeting and Dubai World Cup Carnival, Mike de Kock, is set to saddle 13 runners at Meydan Racecourse on Saturday evening, including Treasure Beach, in the world’s richest horse race, the US$10 million Dubai World Cup.

The Dubai World Cup on Saturday will conclude with a special solo performance by the highly-acclaimed international recording sensation, Seal. The nine-race Dubai World Cup programme is the richest race day in the world and carries a combined prize purse of US$27,250 million.

The action gets underway at 4:30pm with the Purebred Arabian Gr1 Dubai Kahayla Classic, sponsored by Emaar, and comes to a close following the eighteenth running of the US$10m Dubai World Cup at 10:05pm.

Hopeful

Mike de Kock

Mike de Kock

The Dubai World Cup is one of the few races on the card he has yet to win, though he has twice saddled the runner-up, and De Kock is hoping for a big run from Treasure Beach, who looks certain to appreciate every step of the 2000m Tapeta track. The trainer noted that the horse has had only one recent start, finishing sixth in the third round of the Maktoum Challenge on Super Saturday.

“But it was his first start since November and he would have needed it,” De Kock said. “What it did prove was that he handles Tapeta and he has improved a lot, fitness-wise, in the interim. A fast pace would suit him, as he stays further and we are looking forward to running him.”

De Kock said Christophe Soumillon will ride. The trainer was echoing similar sentiments, other than the identity of the jockey, about his $5m Sheema Classic hopeful, Await The Dawn.

“They went no pace at all on Super Saturday in the City Of Gold and it did not suit him at all,” De Kock said. “He won well on his previous start, having needed his first run badly. Hopefully, there will be a better early gallop this time and, with luck in running, he looks capable of a big show” under the jockey Pat Cosgrave, “who gets on well with him”.

Classic

De Kock won the 2400m turf Gr1 race in 2008 with Sun Classique. His best chance on the night would look to be Shea Shea, who won on Super Saturday over the same 1000m turf course and distance as the Gr1 Al Quoz Sprint. Beaten in his local debut, he and Soumillon scorched the turf three weeks ago, establishing a track record.

“We knew he was going to need that first run and he showed the benefit of it in style last time,” De Kock said. “It was impressive and we hope he is the one to beat.”

De Kock has three set to take their chance in the $5m Dubai Duty Free with Mushreq, to be ridden by Paul Hanagan for his main employer Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid, seeking a third 2013 Carnival win.

He is joined in the field by The Apache, winner of the Gr2 Al Rashidiya on his local debut, before finding only Sajjhaa too good in the Gr1 Jebel Hatta on Super Saturday, when stable companion Igugu was sixth. Both of those races were over the same 1800m turf course and distance as the Duty Free, a race De Kock has won twice.

Igugu

South African Horse of the Year, Igugu needs to bounce back to her best after two lacklustre local starts. “We are lucky to have three nice horses for such a valuable prize,” De Kock said. “Igugu is fit and, hopefully, will run a better race. The Apache has done nothing wrong in his two starts locally and remains in good form.” The consistent Star Empire lines up in the Dubai Gold Cup with both Master Of Hounds and Soft Falling Rain taking their chance in the Godolphin Mile.

A Gr1 winner on turf, Master Of Hounds has run well on Tapeta in the past, but Soft Falling Rain, the mount of Paul Hanagan, is defending an unbeaten record that includes a Gr1 win in South Africa and the UAE 2000 Guineas over the same 1,600m on Tapeta as Saturday’s race.

De Kock is seeking a sixth win in the UAE Derby, a race Soft Falling Rain could have contested, but with his stamina a major concern over the 1,900m Tapeta trip, the trainer relies on Zahee and Emotif.

“The 1600m is as far as Soft Falling Rain wants to go and he is facing his stiffest task to date,” De Kock said. “Zahee and Emotif have improved with their outings, but both need to improve on what they have shown to win.

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